Schools teach disabled life skills

Barbara Goldberg

5 Min Read

<p>Tristan Williams, a student at Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, shops for products at a supermarket during a special education program aimed at teaching students life skills, June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Barbara Goldberg</p>

MAPLEWOOD, New Jersey (Reuters Life!) - Calculating the best-priced cookie dough may be a small challenge for the executives of Diamond Enterprises, but making eye contact while paying the cashier is an enormous one.

Diamond Enterprises is a sandwich, salad and snack business run by students with autism and severe learning disabilities at a high school in the state of New Jersey. This year it filled 700 orders, most placed by teachers.

The program at Columbia High School in Maplewood is among a wave of innovative programs in public schools throughout the United States that go beyond the traditional classroom to develop life skills among special-education students.

Special-education students can have difficulty with human interaction, so learning manners and acceptable behaviors such as eye contact is less of a social nicety and more of a survival skill.

“The social piece is at least as important as learning to read and do math,” said Eugene Porta, a teacher who oversees the nine students running Diamond Enterprises. “We need to help them develop skills to function in the community.”

Tallying up orders and making sales for Diamond Enterprises instills business acumen, but a more valuable lesson also may be the teamwork and interaction that most workplaces require but is often absent from the lives of disabled students.

“We really try very hard to make what’s out there in the working world come into the classroom,” Porta said. “If it doesn’t lead to a job, then at least it will mean gaining independence. We want them to be accepted by people in the community.”

LEARNING TO LIVE INDEPENDENTLY

The number of U.S. children with developmental disabilities has been climbing over the past decade, reaching nearly one in six, and the fastest growth rate is among those with autism, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

At the same time, a study this month criticized the lack of services for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities, such as group homes or job opportunities. The vast majority are unemployed and live with aging parents, who rarely plan for new living arrangements as they grow older.

<p>Tristan Williams (L) a student at Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, looks over a package of cookie dough with his teacher Eugene Porta (R) and teacher Kelly Phillips (C) as they shop for products at a supermarket during a special education program aimed at teaching students life skills, June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Barbara Goldberg</p>

That makes it all the more important for special education students to learn skills that will give them their best chance to find and hold a job and live independently.

Special education students in Pittsburgh, in an internship program that embeds them with local businesses, drill in such skills as saying “hello” when entering a room, initiating a conversation and asking for help, said Ashley McFall, the program’s transition coordinator.

In Cincinnati, Project Search teaches students not just the technical skills to be a receptionist or cashier but “soft skills” such as waiting for people to exit before entering an elevator, maintaining proper personal space and how much food to eat at a buffet, said Erin Reihle, a program organizer.

<p>Tristan Williams, a student at Columbia High School in Maplewood, New Jersey, shops for products at a supermarket during a special education program aimed at teaching students life skills, June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Barbara Goldberg</p>

In Maplewood this month, an order for two trays of cookies put Diamond Enterprises in high gear, starting with a trip to a grocery for cookie dough. After a few false starts, the group found its way to the refrigerated aisle, and Tristan Williams, 15, held a package of dough over his head like a trophy.

“You get 24 cookies for $3.89 and 29 for $4.99. Which is a better price?” Porta asked the students.

“Shantea!” the students immediately called on the group’s acknowledged math whiz. She recommended the 24-pack.

Tristan pushed the cart to the self-checkout line, where he scanned the purchase but was thrown a curveball when the machine refused payment and insisted he pay a cashier instead.

Keeping his gaze down, Tristan handed the cashier a $20 bill and dashed back to the machine for further instructions.